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An Article on The History of Bangladesh : by Tanweer Akram
Article by Tanweer Akram
Bangladesh and Pakistan
The creation of Pakistan contained the germs of discord between "West
Pakistanis" and Bangalis. Initially, the population of East Bengal
supported the creation of Pakistan, that is, the partition of the Indian
subcontinent into two constituent parts following the withdrawal and
departure of the British. The Bengali support for the creation of Pakistan
was a result of the transformation of the Bangalis in British occupied
India. During the British rule in the Indian subcontinent, the dominant
section of the Muslim upper class had two components, the zamindars
(landlords) and the ulema (clergy). A few words about these "landlords" is
absolutely necessary. The British consolidated their rule in Bengal by
instituting the zamindars. The zamindari and-holding system gave the
land-owners the right to crop share and revenue collection from the
cultivators in the land entitled to them by the British. In return these
land-owners would provide an annual entitlement charge to the colonial
authorities. The Muslim League represented these "men of property and
influence." In order to counter the Indian Congress' support among the
nationalist Muslim communities as well as serve as a counter-weight to
Indian nationalism, the Muslim League advanced the notion of "two-nation
theory."
The communal separatists devised the "two-nation theory."
This "theory" claimed that the Muslims and the Hindus in the subcontinent
constituted two different and irreconcilable nationalities. This "theory"
did not explain how in spite of vast class, linguistic, ethnic, social,
and cultural differences, Muslims in the subcontinent constituted one
nation, other than that the Muslim constitute a unified nation on a basis
of "divine sanction."
The idea of a distinct state for the Indian
Muslims was first proposed by Muhammed Iqbal; his scheme, which did not
include Bengal, was confined to setting up a separate state for Indian
Muslims in the North-West of the subcontinent. The name Pakistan was
coined by Chaudhuri Rahmat Ali along with a group of students in
Cambridge. Pakistan was an acronym that stood for Punjab, Afgania
(Pathan), Kashmir, Sind, and istan, which is Persian for country. Hence,
Rahmat Ali's scheme too failed to include the "lesser breed" of Bangali
Muslims.
The demand for Pakistan was originally dismissed as a
naive scheme. It was initially viewed as nothing more than a bargaining
tool for the leaders of the Indian Muslims. Despite the incorporation of
the demand for Pakistan into its program, the Muslim League failed to
mobilize grass-root Muslim support for itself. This fact is reflected in
the Muslim League inability to attain a majority among Indian Muslims
prior to the election of 1946.
In its struggle for independence
from the British, the Indian National Congress had utilized the religious
sentiment of Muslims towards the Turkish Sultanate under the Caliphate
title. The Muslims supported Turkey which had entered the First World War
on the German side against the British. The Indian nationalist leaders
built up the Khalifat movement against the British. However, the Khalifat
movement died its natural death when Kamal Atuatur, the reformist
dictator, abolished the nominal position of Caliphate in 1924. The Indian
Congress' strength among Indian Muslims never quite reached the level that
it had during the Khalifat movement. Subsequently, the Muslim League
gained and exerted influence on the Muslim anti-colonialist movement.
It was Jinnah, earlier hailed as "the ambassador of Hindu-Muslim
unity," who led the demand for Pakistan under the slogan of "Divide and
Quit." This demand was the political expression embodying the national
aspirations of Muslim landlords, rising business men, civil servants,
mullahs (priests), and religious pirs (saints). The demand for an
independent state for Indian Muslims became a living force among the
Muslim masses because of its appeal to Indian Muslims that they would have
separate development free from what was described as Hindu domination and
exploitation, with an opportunity for economic prosperity.
On
March 23, 1940, the Muslim League adopted the Lahore Resolution, moved by
Fazlul Huq of Bengal, which called for political independence by creating
two states for Muslims. It stated:
"the areas in which the Muslims are numerically in a majority as in
the North-Western and Eastern Zones of India should be grouped to
constitute 'Indian States' in which the constituent units shall be
autonomous and sovereign."
The Lahore Resolution, which later came to be widely discussed and
debated, was effectively by-passed by the Delhi Resolution. Moved by
H.S.Suhrawardy of Bengal and adopted in the Muslim League Legislators'
Convention on April 9, 1946, it stated:
"any formula devised by the British Government for transferring power
from the British to the people of India...will not contribute to the
solution of the Indian problem [unless]...the Zones comprising Bengal
and Assam in the North-East, and the Punjab, the NWFP, Sind and
Baluchistan in the North-West of India...be constituted into one
sovereign independent state and...implement the establishment of
Pakistan...two separate constitution-making bodies be set up for
Pakistan and Hindustan" (emphasis added).
Pakistan, as it came into being, was the paradigm of an artificial
state. This newly independent state was a geographical anomaly; it was
separated into two parts by approximately 1,600 kilometers of Indian
territory. The Western part consisted of the provinces of Sind,
Baluchistan, North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), and a divided section of
the Punjab, while the Eastern part consisted solely of East Bengal.
The socio-cultural diversity between the two wings of Pakistan was
enormous. In fact, this diversity was extended even to the very basis, the
ideological pretext, that is, the religion of the people, which was to
serve as the unifying force in this country; Islam was understood,
interpreted, and exercised in different ways in these two separate wings.
The history of Islam in "West Pakistan" and East Bengal was completely
dissimilar.
In spite of having established Pakistan on the basis
of the "two-nation theory," a section of the high command of the Muslim
League still retained the idea of establishing a secular parliamentary
state. The contradiction in the position was clearly spelt out in Jinnah's
inaugural address to the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan on August 11,
1947. He declared:
"Any idea of a United India could have never worked and...would have
led us to a terrific disaster...we should begin to work in that spirit
and in course of time all these angularities of the majority and
minority communities---the Hindu community and the Muslim
community---because even as regards Muslims you have Pathans, Punjabis,
Shias, Sunnis and so on and among the Hindus you have Brahmins,
Vashnavas, Khatris, also Bengalees, Madrasis, and so on---will
vanish...this [difference] has been the biggest hindrance on the way of
India to attain her freedom and independence and but for this we would
have been a free people long ago...you are free; you are free to go to
your temples, you are free to go to your mosques or to any other places
of worship in this state of Pakistan. You may belong to any religion or
caste or creed---that has nothing to do with the business of the State.
We are starting with this fundamental principle that we are all citizens
and equal citizens of one State...you will find that in course of time,
Hindus and Muslims would cease to be Hindus and Muslims, not in the
religious sense, because that is the personal faith of each individual,
but in the political sense as citizens of the State" (emphasis added).
The theoretical confusion and the opportunistic nature of Pakistan's
ruling elite is clear in Jinnah's inaugural speech.
The Pakistani
ruling-class, having established the state of Pakistan on the basis of the
"two-nation theory," could not find the ideological justification for
establishing a secular state. The mullahs and the right-wing elements in
the Muslim League wanted Pakistan to be a state with "pan-Islamic ideals"
since Pakistan, they claimed, was not merely a state for Indian Muslims
but also a "Muslim State." The mullahs and their allies argued that since
Pakistani was established to be a state for the Muslims in India, the
state structure and its laws should be based upon the precepts laid in the
medieval religious laws. Yet, the liberal bourgeois component of the
Pakistani ruling class wanted to establish a secular state that functioned
on the basis of civic laws. If, indeed, religion had nothing to do with
"the business of the State," then why carve a separate state for Indian
Muslims? The Pakistani ruling elite were confronted with the dilemma of
over-riding their own claim that Pakistan was to be an Islamic state for
Indian Muslims. The liberal bourgeoisie could not justify advancing
secularism in Pakistan since the state was established on the basis that
Muslims in India constitute not just a distinct religious community, but a
separate nation. That the Indian Muslims did not constitute one homogenous
nationality became apparent in the confrontation of nationalities in the
state of Pakistan and the eventual secession of East Bengal from Pakistan.
The secession of East Bengal demonstrated that the claims of national
unity based upon religious conceptions could not prevent the
disintegration of the state of Pakistan.
THE CRISIS OF THE PAKISTANI RULING ELITE
An Analysis of the of Position of the Bangalis Under Pakistani Rule in
the 1950's
The Muslim League, the first ruling party of Pakistan, lacked a mass
base. The Muslim League came into power in Pakistan after having succeeded
in dividing the subcontinent into two, following the departure of British.
The central government of the state of Pakistan was set up in the Western
wing of the state primarily because most of the upper class of "Musalman"
aristocrats migrated to the western wing. The fundamental difficulties
facing the Pakistani ruling class were: one, to construct a viable polity,
and two, to integrate the various nationalities into this bizarre state,
separated into two wings.
Throughout the history of Pakistan, the
province of East Bengal had a greater population than all the other
provinces of Pakistan combined, as the following table shows:
| Province |
Population in millions |
| 1951 |
1961 |
1971 |
| East Bengal |
41.9 |
50.8 |
70 |
| West Pakistan |
33.7 |
42.9 |
60 |
The central state apparatus, the military and the civil service, was
dominated by the Muslim immigrants from North India and by the Punjabis.
The North Indian Muslims were involved in the British administration in
Delhi. Hence, they dominated the civilian administration in Pakistan. The
Punjab had served as the garrison of the British Indian Army. Hence, the
Punjabis dominated the military in Pakistan.
The Muslim League
decided to make Urdu the sole state language of Pakistan, although only 3
per cent of the population of Pakistan spoke Urdu and over 56 per cent
spoke Bangla. Since Urdu was the language of the dominant class in
Pakistan and hence the language of upper echelons of the Muslim League
leadership, the ruling party decided that Urdu was to be the sole state
language of Pakistan. The explanation provided by the Pakistani ruling
elite was that, since Urdu had more similarity with Arabic and Persian, it
was a more "Islamic" language and since Bangla was derived from
pre-existing Indian languages, primarily Sanskrit, it was a "Hindu"
language.
The Pakistani ruling elite's language proposal did not
meet any organized and serious challenge in the Western wing because the
languages of West Pakistanis had an affinity in nature, structure, and
vocabulary with Urdu. However, for Bangalis, Urdu was an alien and
unrelated language. Thus, the Bangali intelligentsia and political
leadership proposed that both Urdu and Bangla be declared as the state
languages. On March 11, 1948 a province-wide strike was held to protest
the central government's chauvinist policy of rejecting the language of
the majority of the people as unfit to be a state language. Student
demonstrations took place all across East Bengal. In his first trip to
East Bengal on March 21, 1948 at Dhaka (then Dacca) the Governor-General
"Quaid-I-Azam" (literally, the Great Leader) Jinnah declared (in
English!):
"Let me make it clear to you that the State Language of Pakistan is
going to be Urdu and no other language. Anyone who tries to mislead you
is really the enemy of Pakistan...so far as the State Language is
concerned Pakistan's language shall be Urdu."
The Bangalis did not accept Jinnah's claim and continued their
resistance to the imposition of Urdu language. Subsequent attempts by the
Pakistani rulers to replace Bangla script, first with Arabic scripts, and
later with Roman scripts, failed due to the public outcry and popular
mobilization led by the students and the intellectuals, supported by the
middle class and by some sections of the workers and the peasants.
The protests on the language issue culminated on February 21,
1952, when police fired on a student demonstration and killed several
students and bystanders. Politically, the killings led to the formation of
the United Front. The killings also led to the emergence of a new literary
and cultural tradition of protests and secularism among the Bangali
bourgeoisie. The cultural tradition that arose was "sigh of oppressed"
against Pakistani elite's use of religious nationalism. We cannot
underestimate the importance of this event in emergence of the Bangali
nationalism. The Bangalis viewed the Pakistani elite's attempt to impose
Urdu as the state language as a design to prevent them from full
participation in the state rule. Hence, the death of students while
protesting the language policy became an event to rally public support for
the Bangali cause. This day was, and still is, celebrated by Bangalis as
Eukushey February (martyr's day on February 21). Indeed, this event has
become ingrained in the Bangali national political consciousness.
Meanwhile, the economic colonization and the expropriation of
wealth of East Bengal by the West Pakistani ruling elite had already
begun. East Bengal was the world's largest producer of raw jute (a fiber),
which was Pakistan's main foreign exchange earner. The foreign trade
statistics in its first decade for Pakistan were as follows:
Foreign Trade Figures (millions of rupees)
| 5 Year Period |
East Bengal |
West Pakistan |
| Exports |
Imports |
Exports |
Imports |
| 1947-52 |
4582 |
2129 |
3786 |
4769 |
| 1952-57 |
3969 |
2159 |
3440 |
5105 |
While East Bengal was earning a larger share of Pakistan's exports,
West Pakistan had the greater share in imports of consumer goods,
industrial machineries, and raw materials. Thus, the embryonic nature of
exploitative relation was formulated in early the days of Pakistan. The
inter-wing trade policy was designed to allow the West Pakistani
manufacturing sector to dispose its commodities in East Bengal at a price
higher than world market. In spite of rhetoric of the "national unity,"
the export earnings of East Bengal were being used to finance the
development of Karachi, the major commercial city of West Pakistan, and
the Punjab, the dominant province of West Pakistan.
In financial
year 1948-49, the allocation for provincial development expenditure was as
the following table indicates:
| Province |
Amount Allocated (millions rupees) |
| East Bengal |
40 |
| Punjab |
50 |
| Sind |
25 |
| NWFP |
5 |
As the above table shows, the Pakistani ruling elite was interested
more in the development of provinces of West Pakistan, though the majority
of the country's population lived in East Bengal.
Up to 1951,
total expenditure on development projects of Pakistan was 1,126 million
Rs., out of which only 28 million was for East Bengal (1986, 20). The
Pakistani ruling elite, instead of remedying inequities that existed
between the development of productive forces of the two wings, chose an
economic policy that benefited the interests of West Pakistan based
manufacturing sector that sold its commodities in East Bengal. Later, I
will examine the intensification of the economic exploitation of East
Bengal during the era of the military regime.
THE GROWTH OF DISSENT IN EAST BENGAL
An Analysis of the Bangali Quest for Autonomy in First Decade of
Pakistani Rule
On June 23, 1949 the Awami Muslim League was established. The Awami
Muslim League was the first opposition party that came into being in
Pakistan. The Awami League was led by Maulana Bhashani, a peasant and
religious leader and by Suhrawardy, who at one point had advocated a
United Bengal but also supported the Muslim League on some occasions. The
membership of Awami Muslim League consisted of two elements. The first
elements were those whose political ideology was not fundamentally
different from the Muslim League, but who had concluded that the
increasing discrimination against the Bangalis on racial and provincial
basis would hinder their access to political power. The second elements
were younger and more radical, whose political ideology was different from
the Muslim League. They found little worthy of admiring in political
ideology of the pan-Islamism and the spirit of "two-nation theory."
The Awami Muslim League was essentially a provincial party. The
political agenda of Awami League emphasized grievances of Bangalis that
had developed primarily due to failure of the Pakistani ruling elite to
recognize Bangla as a state language. The Awami League called for such
policies as (i) abolishing the British-instituted zamindari (landlord)
system, (ii) nationalization of key industries, and (iii) utilization of
the jute sector for the benefit of the people of the East Bengal. Even in
its early days, the League began reflecting the interests of a
considerable section of the Bangali urban bourgeoisie not only of the
provincial capital Dhaka but also of the district towns. The League, in
October 1955, dropped "Muslim" from its nomenclature in order to attract
non-Muslims into its fold.
The Basic Principle Committee (BPC) of
the National Constitutional Assembly published its report in February,
1950. It called for the reorganization of Pakistan's provinces into two
units: West Pakistan and East Pakistan. The legislature was to have two
houses. In the upper house there would be equal numbers of members from
the two constituting units, while the lower house would be elected on the
basis of population. Initially, it did not specify the number of seats in
the houses. Later, the proposed distribution of seats were as follows:
| Province |
Upper House |
Lower House |
Total |
| East Bengal |
10 |
165 |
175 |
| Punjab |
10 |
75 |
85 |
| NWFP |
10 |
24 |
34 |
| Sind |
10 |
20 |
30 |
| Baluchistan |
10 |
16 |
26 |
| Total |
50 |
300 |
350 |
The upper house was to be indirectly elected. The governmental
mechanism would be a combination of presidential and parliamentary
systems, with a substantial executive power and the choice of selecting
the Prime Minister being retained with the President. The BPC called for
declaring Urdu as the state language. The Bangali political leadership was
outraged at the proposals of the BPC, particularly the language issue. The
Bangalis viewed the proposals as a scheme to perpetuate West Pakistani, or
rather Punjabi, political hegemony over the central government. The
proposals evoked indignation among Bangalis because their numerical
strength would be reduced in a joint session of legislature, which was to
settle any disputes. Moreover, the scope of arbitrary use of autocratic
power by the President could enable the Pakistani ruling class to secure
support for itself and counter any Bangali schemes for changing the status
quo. For Bangali bourgeoisie it was clear that the BPC proposals would
further reduce their already limited role in the state.
The
anti-BPC political maneuvers of Bangali politicians led to the Grand
National Convention (GNC). Although some West Pakistani opposition leaders
participated, the GNC was primarily an initiative of Bangali bourgeois
leadership. According to the GNC proposals, the power of the central
government would be limited to foreign policy and defense. The proposals
at the GNC called for a unicameral legislature, with seats being
distributed among the provinces on the basis of population. The GNC also
proposed that the federal capital be established in Islamabad (West
Pakistan) and every other session of the federal parliament be held in
Dhaka (East Bengal).
These proposals reflected the popular Bangali
demand that both Bangla and Urdu should be the state languages of
Pakistan. In essence, the GNC proposals were an attempts to ensure the
political participation of the Bangalis in the state's decision making
process. The counter-proposals assume that the national interests of the
Bangalis could be safeguarded if the Bangalis were able to exercise their
due political rights within the framework of a bourgeois democratic
polity.
Another response to West Pakistani dominance of the
national political scene was the formation of the Youth League in February
1951. Its formation was inspired by the "Rajshahi jail thesis." It acted
as a counter to state-sponsored ideology of pan-Islamism. They felt that
if the central government were to grant East Bengal autonomy, the province
would be better off. Since the Youth League had a substantial number of
young radicals, the thrust of its propaganda was to show that the
Pakistani elite was exploiting East Bengal. For example, in its manifesto,
the League pointed out, quoting Pakistani government statistics, that the
Consumer Product Index (CPI) had gone up from 100 in 1939 (base year) to
174 in 1948 and 214 in 1949. Also, the Youth League stressed the secular
aspects of Bangali culture, such as the Phaila Baishak (Bangali New Year),
and Rabindranath Tagore's birthday. In addition,it called for an end to
all forms of regionalism and communal discrimination.
Another
reaction to the domination of political power by the West Pakistani ruling
elite was the establishment of the United Front, an alliance of political
parties. It was composed of the Awami League, Krishak Sramik Party,
Ganatantric Dal and other small parties. Its political platform for the
election was based on a 21-point agenda, which emphasized declaring Bangla
as one of the state languages of Pakistan. The 21-point demands also
included plans for abolishing the land-holding system, ending high
interest on agricultural credit extended to farmers by the rural moneyed
class, nationalizing the jute industry, providing fair prices to jute
cultivators, and implementing cooperative farming. The United Front's
program also demanded that the relation between East Bengal and West
Pakistan be restructured on the basis of full regional autonomy; the
program identified three subjects for the central government, namely,
defense, foreign affairs, and currency. As confidence building measures,
the United Front's program suggested that Pakistan's Naval Head Quarters
be relocated to East Bengal and that an arms manufacturing factory be
built in East Bengal.
The provincial election of East Bengal in
March 1954 was a big shock for the Pakistani ruling elite. Basing its
campaign on these demands, the United Front won 227 out of 236 of Muslim
seats. Even the Communists won 5 seats. The Muslim League, which was the
ruling party, won only 10 seats out of 309. This landslide victory
revealed how estranged the Bangali masses were because of the failure of
the Muslim League to deliver on the promises made during the campaign for
Pakistan. The Muslim League, the party of the elite that came to power in
Pakistan, promised that once the state of Pakistan came into being,
Bangalis would be liberated from foreign exploitation and that national
policy would be geared towards their benefit. The United Front's campaign
had succeeded because it raised the slogan of the Bangalis' grievances
against the central government's discrimination. On May 30, 1954 the
United Front government was dismissed by the central government. The Prime
Minister Mohammed Ali explained:
"Our sole aim in taking over the administration of the province is to
save East Bengal and preserve the integrity of Pakistan."
In order to "save" East Bengal, Major-General Iskander Mirza was
appointed the Governor by the central government. After a year of
political intrigue and bargaining, the provincial assembly was restored
and the Governor's rule ended. By then, a section of the United Front had
broken with the Awami League in order to form a ministry in the provincial
government.
THE CRISIS OF PAKISTANI RULING CLASS IN THE 1950s
An Analysis of the Constitutional Crisis and Political
Instability
In October 1954, the conflicts between the Governor-General and the
Constituent Assembly led the Governor-General to dismiss the Constituent
Assembly and proclaim a state of Emergency. The dissolution of the
Constituent Assembly led to a further increase of the bureaucratic power
over the state of Pakistan. Earlier, the Governor-General Ghulam Mohammed
dismissed Khwaja Nazimuddin and appointed Mohammed Ali Bogra as the Prime
Minister of Pakistan. Despite the directive of the Awami League,
Suhrawardy joined Bogra's cabinet as the law minister. Though he himself
had been an ardent exponent of provincial autonomy, Suhrawardy supported
the One Unit scheme. The One Unit scheme was forced upon the Provincial
Assemblies, which elected the Second Constituent Assembly.
On
March 23, 1956 Pakistan become a republic with Iskander Mirza as its first
President. The creation of the republic did not, however, enable the
Pakistani ruling-class either to resolve the "national question" vis-a-vis
the Bangalis (as well other nationalities) or to establish political
stability by the formation of a secure ruling-class political party.
The first republic lasted only till October 1958. Within this
brief period, there were four Prime Minister of Pakistan. During that
period, the provincial politics in East Bengal was reduced to a farce,
with provincial governments changing off and on. The political formation
was made of rapidly changing allegiance at the center of the Muslim League
and the Republican Party, and at East Bengal provincial level of the Awami
League and the Krishak Sramik Party. In East Bengal, the AL and the KSP
battled for governmental positions. The regular shifts of the allegiance
of the members of the legislature were promoted because the country's
bourgeois leadership was corrupt and its political leaders desired to
promote personal gains.
On September 11, 1956 Suhrawardy formed a
coalition government that included the Awami League. On becoming the Prime
Minister of Pakistan, Suhrawardy declared that East Bengal has been
granted 98 per cent autonomy. However, nothing substantial was done to
alter the actual condition of East Bengal. The lack of initiative of their
politicians to change the socioeconomic conditions of East Bengal was
regarded by the Bangali bourgeoisie as a betrayal of the Bangali cause.
Within the Awami League, the central government's failure to
guarantee East Bengal's regional interests led to the formation of
factions, one led by Suhrawardy and the other led by Bhashani. Suhrawardy
supported the design of Pakistan's elite in joining the US-sponsored
military pacts. The differences within the Awami League surfaced at the
Kagmari conference of the party because the Leftist formation within the
Awami League refused to accept Suhrawardy's compromises with the Pakistani
ruling elite. Bhashani's rhetoric led him to declare that, unless complete
autonomy were granted to East Bengal, then Assalumu Alakikum (Farewell) to
Pakistan.
Meanwhile, the politics of intrigue at the central
government continued; Suhrawardy was forced to resign. A general election
was scheduled for 1959. This election was never to be held. With the
proclamation of Martial Law on October 7, 1958, President Mirza abrogated
the constitution, dismissed the central and the provincial governments,
and banned all political parties. The imposition of martial law abolished
what little prospect there was to the establishment a viable bourgeois
democratic process in Pakistan. The military stepped into the power
because the civilian faction of the ruling-class had been unable to set a
political structure that would contain the "national question." The junta
used the disparity between East Bengal and West Pakistan, and the
instability of the political process to justify its taking over the power.
In its first decade of rule, the Pakistani ruling elite would
dismiss the grievances of the Bangali national bourgeoisie as a plot to
undermine the unity of the "Muslim" state. The ruling elite would charge
and accuse that the Bangalis' call for the decentralization of state power
and even their call for the secularization of the state, as being inspired
by secessionist elements, foreign agents, or India, the "natural" enemy of
Pakistan. Ethnic and racial discriminations against the Bangalis went
along with the limitation of the political rights of the Bangalis.
The imposition of martial law served to reduce the numerical
strength of the Bangalis that they could use even if an underdeveloped
bourgeois democracy were to emerge in Pakistan. For the Bangali
bourgeoisie, the failure of civilian rule and subsequent military takeover
further limited its role and scope in the political arena because the
military was predominantly West Pakistani.
From the perspective of
the Bangali bourgeoisie, the military intervention was an attempt to
ensure the West Pakistani dominated military's role in the state
structure, particularly because the scheduled general elections would have
allowed the Bangalis to exercise their numerical strength to gain
political power. Due to the establishment of barricades that prevented
their participation, the Bangali bourgeoisie become disillusioned with the
concept of the Islamic state of Pakistan. Their struggle for autonomy
intensified as a result of the failure of the newly emergent state of
Pakistan to deliver the Bangali bourgeoisie a fair share of power and
privileges.
THE AYUB KHAN REGIME
An Analysis of Pakistani Military Dictatorship and the Bangalis
The proclamation of martial law led to the dismissal of President
Iskander Mirza, when General Ayub Khan took over power and proclaimed
himself President of the Republic on October 27, 1958. The military regime
justified its actions by claiming that the country was headed towards
"national disintegration." The imposition of martial law brought the
military faction, which had already a power-base within the West Pakistani
dominated system, into the forefront of state rule.
The Ayub
regime promised a "growth-oriented economy" and political stability. An
important aspect of the ideology of the Pakistani state during this period
was the slogan of "national unity." Following the political agitation and
reaction of the Bangalis in the 1950's, the Pakistani ruling elite had
become attentive to the regional disparity and the Bangalis'
dissatisfaction with the status quo.
In spite of the Pakistani
elite's acknowledgment of the existence of disparity, the growth of
imbalance and disparity between the wings continued. In effect, although
the ruling elite acknowledged the existence of disparity between the two
wings, it did nothing substantial to remedy the situation. As the state
was the major promoter of economic growth and initiative, the bias in
economic development and growth remained in favor of West Pakistan. Due to
the relative weakness of Bangali bourgeoisie, the position of the Bangalis
deteriorated not only within the Pakistani ruling elite but in comparison
with the West Pakistanis too. After the partition of the subcontinent, the
emergence of state-sponsored capitalism in East Bengal was hampered mainly
because its jute-producing areas became de-linked from the jute-processing
mills of Calcutta in West Bengal. This allowed the penetration of West
Pakistani industrial and merchant capital into East Bengal.
The
change in government did nothing to alter the bias and the racist attitude
towards the Bangalis. President of the republic Ayub Khan himself
expressed his opinion as follows:
"they [the Bangalis] have all the inhibitions of down-trodden races
and have not yet found it possible to adjust psychologically to the
requirements of the new born freedom. Their popular complexes,
exclusiveness, suspicion and a sort of defensive aggressiveness probably
emerge from...historical background."
The dictator's musing on the Bangalis reflected the popular stereotype
of the Bangalis held by the West Pakistani ruling elite. Such racist
conceptualization was a prerequisite for the ruling elite to culturally
oppress the Bangalis.
With the promulgation of the "Basic
Democratic" system, the military regime believed it could legitimize its
rule. Under the "Basic Democracy" system, the National Assembly was
elected by an equal number of 40,000 "Basic Democrats" both in East Bengal
and in West Pakistan. The "Basic Democrats" were linked in a series of
tiered-system that also elected the President. (Needless to say, there was
not anything remotely democratic in the "Basic Democrats" scheme.) The
regime claimed that the British model of bourgeois democracy was
unsuitable for an underdeveloped state like Pakistan. However, the "Basic
Democracy" formula was unable to obstruct the development of Bangali
nationalism.
On June 8, 1962 the military regime lifted martial
law after the election of the National Assembly. In effect, the country
came under the rule of the "Basic Democrat" system, which served the Ayub
Khan dictatorship. This Constitution was opposed not only by the Bangali
bourgeoisie but also by the West Pakistani political opposition. The
opposition at the national level formed the Combined Opposition Party
(COP). In September 1964, the COP nominated Fatima Jinnah, the sister of
M.A.Jinnah, as its candidate for Presidential elections. In the
Presidential election, although Fatima Jinnah lost, she did much better in
East Bengal, where she received 46.6 per cent of the votes cast compared
to 36.36 per cent in her favor nation-wide. Her widespread support in East
Bengal revealed the Bangali dissatisfaction with the Ayub Khan's
administration.
During Ayub Khan's rule, the Bangali intellectuals
and the bourgeoisie became more and more vocal against the economic
exploitation. The Bangali intellectuals made 3 arguments: one, East Bengal
had been turned into a market to dump West Pakistani products; two, the
foreign trade policy was biased in favor of West Pakistani interests; and
three, the ruling elite allocated and distributed resources in favor of
West Pakistan. The examination of the political economy of Pakistan
reveals the exploitation of East Bengal by West Pakistan.
The
Awami League, which was championing the quest for autonomy, formulated a
6-point agenda that was accepted as its program. The program called for
(i) a Federation based on the Lahore Resolution, (ii) central government
dealt only with defense and foreign affairs, (iii) either two separate
currencies for the two wings or same currency for both wings with
provision that flight of capital is prevented and each wing maintain
separate revenue accounts, (iv) the units be given the authority to levy
taxes and to collect revenue, (v) separate foreign exchange accounts for
both the wings, and (vi) setting up a para-military force for East Bengal.
Mujibur Rahman presented this program as the magna carta of ending
economic and socio-political exploitation. Mujibur Rahman was elected the
President of the Awami League and launched a mass campaign in East Bengal
to achieve the demands. The military regime took a attitude of
confrontation and placed Mujib under detention.
The Ayub Khan
regime tried to ruin the credibility of Mujibur Rahman and his program by
charging that he was involved in a conspiracy along with some junior
Bangali military officials to secede from Pakistan and create an
independent state in East Bengal with Indian aid. This case came to be
known as the "Agartala Conspiracy Case." The Bangalis protested against
the fabrication of this case and demanded the unconditional release of
Mujib. Mujib used his defense arguments in this case as an instrument to
put forward his political program. Since the Bangalis did not believe in
the claims of the government, the case cemented the cause of Bangali
nationalism with Mujib's 6-point program. Mujib's popularity rose due to
the charges levied against him; he became a national hero. The charges
against Mujib led to a mass uprising in Bengal.
President Ayub was
forced to drop the case against Mujib. In order to resolve the crisis, the
regime invited the Awami League to participate in the Round Table
Conference (RTC) to discuss the political structure of the state and to
set the ground work for resolving the national problems. The negotiations
with the political parties did not succeed. The masses continued the
demonstrations in the streets for a democratic political order and
economic justice. The government was unable to end the thrust of popular
politics and mass action. Ayub Khan was forced to resign. On March 25,
1969 he handed over power to the military chief Yayha Khan, allegedly on
the grounds that only the military could preserve the state structure.
During Ayub Khan's rule, a centralized political system was
established. This system could not channel the aspirations of the Bangali
bourgeoisie. It did not provide a mechanism for the Bangali bourgeoisie to
enhance its role in the the state's decision making process. The
centralized political system aggravated the call for provincial autonomy.
Due to the failure of the Pakistani military-bureaucratic elite to
accommodate the demands for provincial autonomy for East Bengal, Bangali
nationalist politics became more militant. Although there was an increase
in national output and industrial production, the economic disparity
between the regions did not diminish but rather increased. With the
military in power the prospect of resolving the "national question" in
Pakistan was effectively blocked because the state lacked a democratic
mechanism that could execute changes in national institutions and policy.
The Marginalization of the Bangalis under Pakistani Rule
From 1947 to 1971, when East Bengal was a part of Pakistan, the Bangali
bourgeoisie was the smaller shareholder of the Pakistani ruling structure.
Its role was much weaker than the West Pakistani sections of the
industrial, mercantile, military, and civilian bourgeoisie. As a result,
East Bengal was exploited and colonized by the dominant elite of Pakistan.
>From the birth of the state, the Bangalis were subject to economic
injustice and marginalization. The people's frustration was expressed in
their political struggle for ending military rule and for establishing a
democratic order in the state. The Bangali bourgeois political leadership
believed that a representative political structure would allow their
economic, social, and political rights to be established. However, because
of the structure of power in Pakistan, the plight of the Bangalis
worsened. An examination of the economic situation of Pakistan during the
period reveals this economic marginalization.
The Bangalis as a
nationality were not adequately represented in the civilian administration
and military high command of the state. These posts were predominantly
held by West Pakistanis. The following tables reveal the distribution of
civilian and military posts on the basis of nationalities.
Central Government Civil Service (1955)
| Position |
East Bengal |
West Pakistan |
| Secretary |
0 |
19 |
| Joint Secretary |
3 |
38 |
| Deputy Secretary |
10 |
123 |
| Assistant Secretary |
38 |
510 |
Source: Dawn, Karachi (1955)
The lack of Bangali bourgeoisie representation in the central
government allowed the center to direct its policy in favor of West
Pakistan. The central government's outlay for national development clearly
demonstrates the bias inherent towards West Pakistan. The following table
provides a breakdown of the development expenditure of the two wings.
Development Outlay for Pakistan from 1947-48 to
1960-61
|
Category |
East Bengal |
West Pakistan |
|
In millions of Rupees |
| Government Investment |
1720 |
4300 |
| Government Loans |
184 |
2240 |
| Aid |
76 |
1010 |
The center's development expenditure was concentrated on the
further advancing of economic infrastructure of West Pakistan. For
example, although water resource management for East Bengal was no less
important than for West Pakistan, the central government attached more
importance to the Indus Basin Accord with India rather than the question
of Farraka dam barrage. The funding of Indus Basin water project came from
the center's allocation, not West Pakistan's allocation. Thus, the
Bangalis saw that while West Pakistani's water resources were considered
to be the center's priorities, their water problems were being ignored.
The disparity between the per capita income of the people of the
two wings continued to increase. The table below demonstrates the increase
in the disparity of Per Capita Income between the two wings:
The Per Capita Income Distribution in Pakistan (In M
Rupees)
|
Year |
East
Bengal |
West
Pakistan |
Difference |
| 1959-60 |
269 |
355 |
32% |
| 1964-65 |
285.5 |
419 |
46.7% |
| 1968-69 |
291 |
473.4 |
62.6% |
In terms of per capita income while the condition of the masses in West
Pakistan was improving, the Bangalis found that the per capita income
difference with their Western counterparts was actually increasing.
The foreign trade statistics reveal that in the years 1947-67 of
unified Pakistan, East Bengal was the major foreign exchange earner while
West Pakistan was in foreign trade debt. The table below shows:
Foreign Trade Figures 1947-67 (In M Rupees)
| Position |
East Bengal |
West Pakistan |
| Exports |
20,982,391 |
15,704,714 |
| Imports |
15,183,796 |
34,388,211 |
| Balance |
5,798,595 |
-18,683,497 |
Source: Central Statistical Office (1967).
As the
table shows, East Bengal exported 57 per cent of Pakistan's total exports
but had only 30 per cent share of the total imports, while West Pakistan
exported only 42 per cent of the total exports but its share of total
imports was 70 per cent. Whereas East Bengal was a net exporter, West
Pakistan was a net importer. The Western wing of the state had a greater
share of Pakistan's imports and used the foreign exchange earned by East
Pakistan for its own benefit.
Defense outlay for Pakistan was
extremely high. From 1950-51 to 1968-69 the defense outlay was Rs.
21,178.1 million. This constituted approximately 56 per cent of the total
government outlay of that period. The anti-Indian rhetoric was used to
boost defense expenditure. By levying taxes in East Bengal and spending it
on West Pakistan the West Pakistani bourgeoisie benefited from the high
defense outlay. The defense expenditure, which was in the forms of wages,
contracts, and investments, was primarily in West Pakistan. The apparent
rationale for the concentration of military build-up was based upon the
claim of the West Pakistani dominated military that "the security of East
Bengal lay in the Western wing." The Pakistani military claimed that it
would preserve the security of East Bengal with a pre-emptive strike from
the Western Wing. During the 1965 Indo-Pakistan War over the Kashmir
issue, East Bengal was left defenseless and vulnerable to Indian
aggression. The view that that East Bengal security lay in West Pakistann
no longer appealed to the Bangalis because the war cut-off East Bengal
from West Pakistan and the rest of the world. Thus, the Bangalis learnt
that in spite of their contribution to the expensive defense outlay, the
central government did not attach much importance to East Bengal's
security. Their tax contribution towards defense has been diverted solely
for the benefit of West Pakistan, not for their security.
In
essence, as the above arguments show, the fundamental nature of relation
between East Bengal and West Pakistan from 1947 to 1971 was one of
economic disparity. Because the Bangalis and the West Pakistani ruling
elite could not reach a political settlement, this economic question
became the main issue of their conflict. The nature of the economic
development of Pakistan in 1950's and 1960's show that the disparity
between the two wings became greater due to the economic policies adopted
by the state. The Awami League used the regional economic disparity of
East Bengal to show the need for its political program. The 6-point
program of the Awami League was designed to address the Bangali
nationalist consciousness regarding the increase of disparity. The Awami
League presented its 6-point program as an instrument to end the economic
exploitation of East Bengal.
Bangali nationalism grew because the
Pakistani ruling elite refused to recognize the demands of the Bangalis
for political participation in the state and for the economic self-rule of
East Bengal. The crisis climaxed following the 1970 elections, when the
Awami League won a truimphant electoral victory because the party
reflected the nationalist inspiration of the Bangalis. The failure of the
Pakistani ruling elite to meet the demands of the Awami League program led
to a political deadlock. The military refused to accept the 6-point
program because it would reduce the military budget and dismantle the West
Pakistani business interests in East Bengal. In order to prevent the
Bangali political leadership from acquiring power, the military junta
colluded with the West Pakistani bourgeoisie to crush Bangali nationalism.
The military's massacre of the Bangalis opened the road to the liberation
of East Bengal.
THE YAHIYA KHAN REGIME
The Yahiya Khan regime did not have a strong base because it came to
power following the mass agitation against the Ayub Khan regime. The
crisis of Ayub Khan's dictatorial rule led to the resumption of power by
the military. The new regime tried to dispel any notion that it had a
long-term objective of remaining in power by positing itself as an
intermediary and transitional authority. The regime announced that it
wanted to transfer power to the people's representative and admitted that
East Bengal had been denied a full share in the decision-making process.
The regime dissolved the One Unit Scheme, and it promised that elections
would be held on the basis of poular franchaise. In order to provide a
legal facade, the regime promulgated a "Legal Framework Order" (LFO) for
the purpose of Pakistan's first general elections.
According to
the Legal Framework Order, the seats of the National Assembly, which was
to frame the Constitution, would be distributed in conformity with the
population of the provinces. The distribution of the seats was as
follows:
| PROVINCES |
Seats |
| East Bengal |
169 |
| The Punjab |
85 |
| Sind |
28 |
| Baluchistan |
5 |
| NWFP |
19 |
| Tribal Areas |
7 |
| Total |
313 |
In spite of some objections to the structure and the mechanism of the
proposed transition to democratic rule, the Awami League decided to
participate in the elections. The leaders of the Awami League described
the forthcoming elections as a "a referendum on the autonomy issue." The
Awami League argued that, if elected, they would implement the 6-point
agenda and, thus, establish the due rights of the Bangalis. The
nationalistic Awami League campaign reflected the mood of the Bangalis who
had been long neglected in the political rule of Pakistan. The long
campaign period allowed the Awami League to explain the pauperization of
East Bengal in terms of the exploitative relation that existed between the
two wings.
The Bangali bourgeoisie saw this election as an
opportunity to exercise the Bangali electoral strength to gain power and
reverse their conditions. A Bangali journal captured the tone of the
bourgeois intellectuals:
"In East Pakistan, for the first time the grip of the power elite
stands to be broken. Their first defeat will demoralize them as much as
it will inspire the people of West Pakistan."
Such analysis assumed that the Bangalis' struggle for autonomy would
spontaneously transform to a common and united struggle of all the
nationalities against the Pakistani ruling elite. However, Pakistan did
not have a single transnational political organization that could unite
the marginalized sections of Pakistani society. Hence, the other
nationalities did not join the Bangali struggle.
In November 1970,
a devastating cyclone struck the coastal areas of East Bengal, killing
thousands of people. However, the central government failed to aid the
cyclone-strieken people. The government was severely criticized for
treating the Bangalis in a callous manner. Mujib and other Awami League
leaders toured the ravaged areas, including the off-shore islands. The
political leadership urged the people to use the ballot-box to express
their indignation at the treatment they received from the central
government.
In the election that followed, the Awami League won a
triumphant victory. At the East Bengal Assembly elections, the results
were as follows:
| Parties |
Seats |
| Awami League |
298 |
| Other Parties |
5 |
| Independents |
7 |
| TOTAL |
310 |
At the National Assembly elections, the Awami emerged as the majority
party, as the table shows:
| Parties |
Seats |
| Awami League |
167 |
| Pakistan People's
Party |
88 |
| Other Parties |
44 |
| Independents |
14 |
| TOTAL |
313 |
The military, bureaucracy, and business, all West Pakistani-dominated,
were shocked at the results because they faced the prospect that the
central government's power would be passed away to the Bangalis, if the
Awami League were allowed to shape the constitution and form a government.
The results of the election gave the Awami League the possibility of
framing the constitution according to its 6-point program. The election
put the Pakistani ruling elite in such a position that, if it allowed the
democratic process to continue, then it would be unable to stop the Awami
League from framing a constitution that would protect the Bangali
interests.
In West Pakistan, the Pakistan People's Party, led by
Z.A.Bhutto, emerged as the dominant party. Representing the interests of
the West Pakistani bourgeoisie, Bhutto announced that the PPP would not
allow any constitution to be framed without its consent and participation.
The PPP declared that it would refuse to participate in any National
Assembly session, as it was not "prepared to occupy Opposition benches."
Clearly, Bhutto was not only bargaining for personal position but also
preserving West Pakistani hegemony.
In this situation, tri-party
negotiations and talks began among the Yayha regime, Mujib's Awami League,
and Bhutto's PPP. The Yahiya regime declared that the National Assembly
session would be held on March 3, 1971. During the negotiations, the West
Pakistani forces refused to accept the 6-point program. Bhutto colluded
with the West Pakistani bourgeoisie and denounced the 6-point program as a
secession plan. Although the West Pakistani military regime announced that
the National Assembly would hold its session on March 3, 1971, the PPP
decided to boycott the session. Bhutto threatened that the Assembly would
be turned into a "slaughter house" if its memebrs endorsed a constitution
based on the Awami League's program.
While the negotiations with
the Awami League were proceeding, the military had decided to attack the
Bangalis in order to crush their demands. The central government
transferred army divisions from West Pakistan to East Bengal as part of
its preparations. Yahiya Khan dissolved the civilian cabinet and appointed
a military cabinet. The military designed a plan titled "Operation
Searchlight" with the objectives: one, treating the Awami League
activities as rebellious; two, arresting the maximum number of political
and student leaders and intellectuals; and three, demilitarizing the
Bangali troops.
The military regime continued the dialogue with
Mujib in order to have the time to dispatch more troops into East Bengal.
Although the Awami League was aware of the troop build-up, it continued
the dialogue with the military. Its leadership did not predict that the
military will strike the populace. The Awami League demanded the
withdrawal of the troops and transfer of power to the elected
representatives. During this period, there were clashes between the
Bangalis and the military stationed in East Bengal, resulting in deaths of
many civilians.
The radicals within the Awami League and the
student organizations called upon the Awami League leadership to declare
independence. On March 7, 1971 Sheik Mujib, in an articulate and carefully
phrased speech, asked the Bangalis to prepare for a resistance to the
regime but stopped just short of declaring independence. The Awami League
set up a non-violent and non-cooperation movement, which proved quite
successful. The program adopted measures such as (i) refusal to pay tax,
(ii) stoppage of the flight of capital from East wing to the West wing,
(iii) observation of hartals (strikes), (iv) hoisting of black flags, (v)
access to state-controlled media for the opposition, and (vi) setting up
council of action under Awami League leadership. The directives of the
Awami League were extremely successful, and the administrative control of
East Bengal effectively passed from the Pakistani authorities to the Awami
League.
While the military prepared to strike the Bangalis, Yayha
Khan flew to Dhaka on March 15, 1971 and gave the impression of renewing
the negotiations with the Awami League. Bhutto also participated in the
negotiations. The National Assembly session was put off again until March
25. During the talks the Awami League refused to compromise because its
electoral victory was based on the support for the autonomy of East
Bengal. The Awami League leaders still thought that negotiations with the
military junta could be fruitful. It believed that it could obtain
concessions from the military regime and from Bhutto's Pakistan's Peoples
Party. The Awami League was not prepared for an armed showdown with the
Pakistani military.
The military dictator and the central
government officials left Dhaka without prior notice. Immediately, at
11:00 p.m. on March 25, 1971, troop movements started. In Dhaka and
elsewhere in East Bengal, the Pakistan army began an orgy of killings,
rape, violence, and looting.
Mujib declared Independence before he
was arrested by the military. Other political leaders of the Awami League
managed to escape to India, where they set up a provisional government and
organized the armed resistance to the Pakistani army. The Bangali troops,
although Pakistani authorities ordered to disarm, resisted the Pakistan
army and fought back. Thus, the Bangali National Liberation began its
phase of armed struggle.
THE BIRTH OF BANGLADESH
After winning the 1970 elections, the Awami League was not in a
position to compromise its political program without being regarded as a
traitor to the Bangali cause. Since the Awami League did not compromise,
the negotiations with the regime broke down although the talks produced a
semblance of agreement. As planned, the Pakistani army launched an attack
on the Bangalis without warning, with a view to weaken and demolish
Bangali nationalism.
The military arrested Sheik Mujib, the leader
of the Awami League. He had earlier sent a message declaring independence.
The military launched a systematic attack on the Bangali people. The
military shelled the Dhaka University, killing the university teachers and
students; the soldiers broke into women's dormitories and raped the women.
They buried the dead in mass graves that were bull-dozed over by the
tanks. The military used artillery and heavy machine gun fire to crush the
Bangali civilians, the local police, and the Bangali troops. The military
set up strongholds in Dhaka and in other parts of East Bengal. The
Pakistani soldiers set ablaze working class parts of the shanty towns,
markets, houses of political workers, and newspaper offices; and they shot
civilians indiscriminately. The military specially targeted the Hindu
minority in East Bengal because they blamed "Hindu" India and the Hindu
community in East Bengal as the master-mind behind Bangali secession
plans.
The Bangalis tried their best to escape the wrath of the
Pakistan army. The crackdown was intended to demolish Bangali nationalism
by inflicting cruelty and to prevent the Bangalis from exercising their
right to self-determination. A Pakistani officer rationalized the military
action thus:
"We will kill them [Bangalis]---they have spoken enough---they are
traitors, and we are not. We are fighting in the name of God and a
united Pakistan."
After the first morning of military attack on the Bangalis, the leader
of West Pakistan's dominant party, Bhutto, was flown to West Pakistan,
where he declared: "Pakistan has been saved by the grace of the Almighty."
The military attack on the Bangalis transformed the movement for
attaining political self-rule into a national struggle of the Bangalis,
irrespective of their political affiliation, religious preference, or
class background. For the Bangalis, the military attack on the unarmed
civilians proved that the West Pakistani ruling elite and the Pakistani
army would not seek a negotiated settlement with the Bangali political
leadership. The military attack upon the Bangalis was a campaign to
destroy what the Bangalis were poised to achieve if the constitutional
process were allowed to function.
The Bangalis resisted the
military action spontaneously with primitive arms, by building barricades,
and by creating obstacles. In some places, particularly in the rural
areas, where the military could not reach immediately, the public under
the action committees set up by the Awami League proclaimed the formation
of liberated zones. Bangali troops rebelled against the Pakistani army.
Widely supported by the populace, the Bangali troops resisted, fought the
Pakistan army, and initiated the liberation struggle.
Some of the
Awami League leaders had gone underground and escaped to India. Some
Bangali employees of the state Radio escaped and set up a clandestine
radio station, which urged the Bangalis to resist Pakistani rule and
repression. Meanwhile, the elected Bangali members of the National
Assembly and the Provincial Assembly gathered in a liberated zone of East
Bengal and proclaimed independence of the state of Bangladesh from
Pakistan.
The Awami League was able to retain control of the main
thrust of the movement for the national liberation of Bangladesh. The
Awami League established a interim government led by Tajuddin. Tajuddin
was extremely efficient and successful in the management of the government
in exile. The Bangladesh government in exile established contact with the
Indian authorities. The Awami League established guerrilla training camps
and retained control over the guerrilla movement. The Bangladesh
government-in-exile launched an international campaign using non-resident
Bangalis abroad as the spokespersons for the Bangali cause. Several
Bangalis in the Pakistani civil and diplomatic services defected in favor
of the government of Bangladesh. The government-in-exile was able to build
a reliable bureaucratic machinery in Calcutta, which functioned well for a
government outside the parameters of the state.
The Awami League
was able to convince the Indian authorities of the need to support the
struggle for the national liberation of Bangladesh. The profound
international sympathy for the Bangalis was a result of the massacre of
the Bangalis and the influx into India of 10 million refugees who escaped
from the Pakistani army brutality. In West Bengal, the Indian Bangalis
were extremely generous although they themselves possessed few resources.
The Bangalis received substantial support from the Indian authorities in
the form of guerrilla training, facilities, arms and ammunition to fight
the military regime.
The dynamics of the international situation
altered with the signing of the Indo-Soviet treaty, which guaranteed the
security of India. The government of India recognized Bangladesh on
December 6, 1971. With Indians allying with Bangalis in the National
Liberation of Bangladesh, the joint forces of Bangladesh and India was
able to overcome the Pakistani army easily. The Bangali guerrillas had
penetrated into East Bengal and had expert knowledge of the terrain and
the activities of the Pakistan army. The Indian forces possessed superior
fire-power and better troops. The Indians cutoff the air links between
East Bengal and West Pakistan. The Pakistan army could not receive new
supplies or further troop support. With the introduction of Indian forces,
the Pakistan army was being defeated in all the battles. Realizing the
possibility of total annihilation, the Pakistan army surrendered to the
joint command of Bangladesh and Indian forces on December 16, 1971. With
the unconditional surrender of the Pakistani army, Bangladesh was finally
liberated.
The National Liberation of Bangladesh was the result of
the transformation of the political struggle of the Bangali bourgeoisie to
attain power into the national struggle of the Bangalis to resist the
genocidal actions of the Pakistani army. The economic exploitation of East
Bengal stimulated the radicalization of Bangali politics. As a result, the
Awami League thrived on the Bangali bourgeois demand for political
autonomy. Even after the tremendous victory of the Awami League in 1970
elections, the Pakistani ruling elite failed to recognize the Bangali
demands. The Pakistani ruling elite could not visualize that the
conditions in East Bengal had reached the point where the masses would not
accept West Pakistani hegemony and, in the event of military crackdown,
the masses would risk their lives to challenge West Pakistani hegemony.
The indiscriminate attacks, killings, and rapes and the very attempt to
retain East Bengal by military means, further escalated the Bangalis' bid
to independence. The qualitative change of the autonomy movement into a
liberation struggle led to the independence of Bangladesh.
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